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VMware Exam 2V0-13.24 Topic 3 Question 6 Discussion

Actual exam question for VMware's 2V0-13.24 exam
Question #: 6
Topic #: 3
[All 2V0-13.24 Questions]

An architect is designing a VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF)-based private cloud solution for a customer that will include two physical locations. The customer has stated the following requirement:

All management tooling must be resilient at the component level within a single site.

When considering the design decisions for VMware Aria Suite components, what should the Architect document to meet the stated requirement?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C

The requirement specifies that management tooling must be resilient at the component level within a single site, meaning each site's management components (e.g., VMware Aria Suite) must withstand individual failures without relying on the other site. Let's evaluate each option in the context of VCF 5.2 and Aria Suite:

Option A: The solution will implement an external load balancer for Aria Operations Cloud Proxies

Aria Operations Cloud Proxies collect data for monitoring and don't inherently require an external load balancer for resiliency within a site. The VMware Aria Operations Administration Guide indicates that proxies are lightweight and typically deployed per cluster, with resiliency achieved via multiple proxies, not load balancing. This doesn't directly address component-level resiliency for the broader Aria Suite management tools.

Option B: The solution will configure the VCF Workload domain in a stretched topology across two locations

A stretched topology extends a workload domain across two sites for site-level resiliency (e.g., disaster recovery), not component-level resiliency within a single site. The VCF 5.2 Architectural Guide notes that stretched clusters rely on cross-site failover, which contradicts the requirement for single-site resilience, making this irrelevant to management tooling within one site.

Option C: The solution will deploy three Aria Automation appliances in a clustered configuration

VMware Aria Automation (formerly vRealize Automation) supports a clustered deployment with three appliances (primary, replica, and failover) to ensure high availability within a site. The VMware Aria Automation Installation Guide confirms that this configuration provides component-level resiliency by allowing the cluster to tolerate individual appliance failures without service disruption. In VCF, Aria Automation is a key management tool, and this design meets the requirement for single-site resilience.

Option D: The solution will deploy Aria Suite Lifecycle Manager in a high availability configuration

Aria Suite Lifecycle Manager (LCM) manages the lifecycle of Aria components but isn't deployed in a clustered HA configuration itself in VCF 5.2---it's a single appliance with backup/restore options. The VCF 5.2 Administration Guide notes that LCM resiliency is typically achieved via infrastructure HA (e.g., vSphere HA), not native clustering, making this less directly aligned with component-level resiliency compared to Aria Automation clustering.

Conclusion:

Option C best meets the requirement by ensuring Aria Automation, a critical management tool, is resilient at the component level within a single site through clustering, aligning with VCF and Aria Suite best practices.


VMware Cloud Foundation 5.2 Architectural Guide (docs.vmware.com): Management Component Design.

VMware Aria Automation Installation Guide (docs.vmware.com): Clustered Configuration for HA.

VMware Aria Suite Lifecycle Administration Guide (docs.vmware.com): LCM Deployment Options.

Contribute your Thoughts:

Edgar
14 days ago
Stretched topology, huh? Sounds like the architect is trying to stretch the limits of what's possible. I hope they've got a good chiropractor on speed dial!
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Allene
16 days ago
Option D is clearly the way to go. High availability is the name of the game, and Aria Suite Lifecycle Manager is the key to unlocking that sweet, sweet resilience.
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Harley
16 days ago
I agree with Ilene, option C ensures resilience at the component level within a single site.
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Ilene
17 days ago
But option D only focuses on the Lifecycle Manager, not the other components.
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Marguerita
17 days ago
Hey, why not use an external load balancer for the Aria Operations Cloud Proxies? That's the most elegant solution, if you ask me. Plus, it's always fun to play with load balancers, am I right?
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Salena
19 days ago
I disagree, I believe option D is the best choice.
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Britt
19 days ago
I'd say option C is the way to go. Clustered Aria Automation appliances will keep everything running smoothly, and who doesn't love a good cluster?
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Ilene
1 months ago
I think we should go with option C.
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Otis
1 months ago
Hmm, I'm not sure about that. Stretched topology across two locations sounds like the best way to achieve resilience to me.
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Magdalene
9 days ago
Using an external load balancer for Aria Operations Cloud Proxies could also enhance resilience at the component level.
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Shay
11 days ago
I think having high availability configuration for Aria Suite Lifecycle Manager is crucial for resilience.
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Larae
17 days ago
But deploying three Aria Automation appliances in a clustered configuration could also meet the requirement.
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Tess
23 days ago
I agree, a stretched topology across two locations would provide the necessary resilience.
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Lennie
1 months ago
Definitely go with option D. High availability for Aria Suite Lifecycle Manager is the way to go to ensure resilience at the component level.
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Justine
23 days ago
High availability configuration is key for meeting the customer's requirement.
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Dottie
25 days ago
I agree, option D is the best choice for ensuring resilience.
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